What about six million innocent people murdered by a genocidal despot?
The deaths of these people were horrible---there is no getting around that. But what about them? God loves them also, and desired them to know Him through His Son, Jesus. The carnage that happened in Germany is also a spiritual carnage, for most of them would have been killed having rejected their Messiah. That makes the tragedy even more painful to contemplate.
The same love of God for these poor people is the same love he had for those who killed them. They were all sinners. The particular sin that is committed doesn't make a sinner a sinner---it is one's position before God that makes one a sinner.
I can't comment because I don't know the extent of that criminal's crimes. I am taking the logic you are using and extending it to a genocidal maniac and showing you that SOME people are going to have a problem with it. Now, I want to be really clear that I'm not questioning God, nor am I questioning His actions. What I'm questioning is your understanding of the Bible and suggesting that it might not possibly be as clear as you are saying it is.
Why should we make a problem out of it? God will have His Day. You are the one with the problem that needs to be taken to God for Him to sort you out.
What you have concerning God's word is an interpretation, whether you want to admit that or not. That's all I have, too. And when I question the way you follow it you should not interpret it as an attack but a suggestion to be open to the possibility that there's another way of looking at it.
So far, after 52 years of studying the word and walking with God, He hasn't given me any alternatives for looking at many things.